Android will still support ActiveSync. Personal Gmail accounts will stop being able to utilize that, but Android itself will be unaffected because Gmail will be native. IOS devices have a Gmail app that is available for download, so the impact there will be minimal. This is just a punk move by Google since they will support ActiveSync for paying customers (Business, Education, Government), and hose everyone else. Bad form.

I have a google account for education so I won't be as effected like a lot of people will be. I recently opened an outlook.com email address and I am looking to migrate personal mail there and keeping my work email on Google.

The only thing that will change Google's mind is if Windows Phone starts taking a larger market share. Rooting for that to happen.

Actually, Android has no native support for ActiveSync. The OEM has to license it, separately, from Microsoft.

Many Android devices don't support Exchange as a result.

Which devices don't support ActiveSync now? My old T-Mobile G2 does and that was supposed to be pretty close to stock Android. If Android has no ActiveSync support, then the manufacturers would build it in. It's too important to business customers.

Google is just no longer going to let its own Gmail users be able to use ActiveSync unless they pay for it. Again, bad form, since they will be supporting it anyway for their enterprise customers.